MRS Meetings and Events

 

EL01.06.05 2023 MRS Fall Meeting

Reversibly Modifying The Structure of Graphite Moiré Domain Walls via STM-Tip Induced Deformations

When and Where

Nov 28, 2023
4:45pm - 5:00pm

Hynes, Level 2, Room 204

Presenter

Co-Author(s)

Nirjhar Sarkar1,Prabhakar Bandaru1,Robert Dynes1

University of California, San Diego1

Abstract

Nirjhar Sarkar1,Prabhakar Bandaru1,Robert Dynes1

University of California, San Diego1
Highly oriented pyrolytic graphite may be the only known monatomic crystal with the ability to host naturally formed moiré patterns on its cleaved surfaces, which are coherent over micrometer scales and with discrete sets of twist angles of fixed periodicity. Such an aspect is in marked contrast to twisted bilayer graphene and other multilayered systems, where the long-range coherence of the moiré is not easily maintained due to twist angle disorder. We investigate the electronic and mechanical response of coherent graphite moiré patterns through inducing external strain from scanning tunneling microscopy tip-induced deformation. Consequently, unique anisotropic mechanical characteristics are revealed. For example, a lateral widening of one-dimensional domain walls (DWs) bridging Bernal (ABA) and rhombohedral (ABC) stacking domains (A, B, and C refer to the atomic layer positioning), was indicated. Further, in situ tunneling spectroscopy as a function of the deformation indicated a tendency towards increased electrical conductance, which may be associated with a higher density of electronic states, and the consequent flattening of the electronic energy band dispersion. Such features were probed across the DWs, with implications for strain-induced electronic modulation of the moiré characteristics.<br/><br/>Ref: Sarkar N, Bandaru PR, Dynes RC. Characteristic nanoscale deformation on a large-area coherent graphite moiré pattern. Physical Review B. 2023 Apr 5;107(16):L161402.

Keywords

C | elastic properties | scanning probe microscopy (SPM)

Symposium Organizers

SungWoo Nam, University of California, Irvine
Kayla Nguyen, University of Oregon
Michael Pettes, Los Alamos National Laboratory
Matthew Rosenberger, University of Notre Dame

Publishing Alliance

MRS publishes with Springer Nature